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Page 1128, results 28176 - 28200

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Assessing large-scale surveyor variability in the historic forest data of the original U.S. Public Land Survey
K.L. Manies, D.J. Mladenoff, E.V. Nordheim
2001, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (31) 1719-1730
The U.S. General Land Office Public Land Survey (PLS) records are a valuable resource for studying pre-European settlement vegetation. However, these data were taken for legal, not ecological, purposes. In turn, the instructions the surveyors followed affected the data collected. For this reason, it has been suggested that the PLS...
Combined use of remote sensing and continuous monitoring to analyse the variability of suspended-sediment concentrations in San Francisco Bay, California
C.A. Ruhl, D. H. Schoellhamer, R. P. Stumpf, C.L. Lindsay
2001, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (53) 801-812
Analysis of suspended-sediment concentration data in San Francisco Bay is complicated by spatial and temporal variability. In situ optical backscatterance sensors provide continuous suspended-sediment concentration data, but inaccessibility, vandalism, and cost limit the number of potential monitoring stations. Satellite imagery reveals the spatial distribution of surficial-suspended sediment concentrations in the...
Identifying variably saturated water-flow patterns in a steep hillslope under intermittent heavy rainfall
A. I. El-Kadi, J.D. Torikai
2001, Hydrogeology Journal (9) 231-242
The objective of this paper is to identify water-flow patterns in part of an active landslide, through the use of numerical simulations and data obtained during a field study. The approaches adopted include measuring rainfall events and pore-pressure responses in both saturated and unsaturated soils at the site. To account...
Occurrence of cyanazine compounds in groundwater: Degradates more prevalent than the parent compound
D.W. Kolpin, E.M. Thurman, S. M. Linhart
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 1217-1222
A recently developed analytical method using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry was used to investigate the occurrence of cyanazine and its degradates cyanazine acid (CAC), cyanazine amide (CAM), deethylcyanazine (DEC), and deethylcyanazine acid (DCAC) in groundwater. This research represents some of the earliest data on the occurrence of cyanazine degradates in groundwater....
Historical trace metal accumulation in the sediments of an urbanized region of the Lake Champlain watershed, Burlington, Vermont
E.L. Mecray, J.W. King, P.G. Appleby, A.S. Hunt
2001, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (125) 201-230
This study documents the history of pollution inputs in the Burlington region of Lake Champlain, Vermont using measurements of anthropogenic metals (Cu, Zn, Cr, Pb, Cd, and Ag) in four age-dated sediment cores. Sediments record a history of contamination in a region and can be used to assess the changing...
Eruptive stratigraphy of the Tatara-San Pedro complex, 36°S, sourthern volcanic zone, Chilean Andes: Reconstruction method and implications for magma evolution at long-lived arc volcanic centers
M.A. Dungan, A. Wulff, R. Thompson
2001, Journal of Petrology (42) 555-626
The Quaternary Tatara–San Pedro volcanic complex (36°S, Chilean Andes) comprises eight or more unconformity-bound volcanic sequences, representing variably preserved erosional remnants of volcanic centers generated during ∼930 ky of activity. The internal eruptive histories of several dominantly mafic to intermediate sequences have been reconstructed, on the basis of correlations of...
User interface for ground-water modeling: Arcview extension
Ming-shu Tsou, Donald O. Whittemore
2001, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (6) 251-257
Numerical simulation for ground-water modeling often involves handling large input and output data sets. A geographic information system (GIS) provides an integrated platform to manage, analyze, and display disparate data and can greatly facilitate modeling efforts in data compilation, model calibration, and display of model parameters and results. Furthermore, GIS...
Evaluation of mixed-population flood-frequency analysis
P.J. Murphy
2001, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (6) 62-70
A mixed population of flood flows was shown to cause quality-of-fit problems if a single-population flood-frequency distribution was used to describe the flood data. The three populations in this mix were "ordinary," tropical cyclone, and ice-jam-release floods. Parametric descriptions of the single and separated flood populations were evaluated using probability-plot...
Natural attenuation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the leachate plume of a municipal landfill: Using alkylbenzenes as process probes
Robert P. Eganhouse, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Martha A. Scholl, L.L. Matthews
2001, Groundwater (39) 192-202
More than 70 individual VOCs were identified in the leachate plume of a closed municipal landfill. Concentrations were low when compared with data published for other landfills, and total VOCs accounted for less than 0.1% of the total dissolved organic carbon. The VOC concentrations in the core of the anoxic...
A comparison of solute-transport solution techniques and their effect on sensitivity analysis and inverse modeling results
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2001, Ground Water (39) 300-307
Five common numerical techniques for solving the advection-dispersion equation (finite difference, predictor corrector, total variation diminishing, method of characteristics, and modified method of characteristics) were tested using simulations of a controlled conservative tracer-test experiment through a heterogeneous, two-dimensional sand tank. The experimental facility was constructed using discrete, randomly distributed, homogeneous...
Seabed observation & sampling system
D. Blackwood, K. Parolski
2001, Sea Technology (42) 39-43
SEABOSS has proved to be a valuable addition to the USGS data-acquisition and processing field program. It has allowed researchers to collect high-quality images and seabed samples in a timely manner. It is a simple, dependable and trouble-free system with a track record of over 3,000 deployments. When used as...
Identifying unprotected and potentially at risk plant communities in the western USA
R.G. Wright, J. M. Scott, S. Mann, M. Murray
2001, Biological Conservation (98) 97-106
We analyzed the conservation status of 73 vegetation cover types distributed across a 1.76 million km2 region in 10 states of the western USA. We found that 25 vegetation cover types had at least 10% of their area in nature reserves. These were generally plant communities located at higher elevations...
Price current-meter standard rating development by the U.S. geological survey
E. F. Hubbard, G. E. Schwarz, K.G. Thibodeaux, L.M. Turcios
2001, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (127) 250-257
The U.S. Geological Survey has developed new standard rating tables for use with Price type AA and pygmy current meters, which are employed to measure streamflow velocity. Current-meter calibration data, consisting of the rates of rotation of meters at several different constant water velocities, have shown that the original rating...
Contribution of base flow to nonpoint source pollution loads in an agricultural watershed
K. E. Schilling, C.F. Wolter
2001, Ground Water (39) 49-58
Nonpoint source pollution of surface water from overland flow, drainage tiles, and ground water discharge is a major cause of water quality impairment in Iowa. Nonpoint source pollution from base flow ground water was estimated in the Walnut Creek watershed by measuring chemical loads of atrazine, nitrate, chloride, and sulfate...
A simple algorithm for sequentially incorporating gravity observations in seismic traveltime tomography
T. Parsons, R.J. Blakely, T.M. Brocher
2001, International Geology Review (43) 1073-1086
The geologic structure of the Earth's upper crust can be revealed by modeling variation in seismic arrival times and in potential field measurements. We demonstrate a simple method for sequentially satisfying seismic traveltime and observed gravity residuals in an iterative 3-D inversion. The algorithm is portable to any seismic analysis...
A comparison of U.S. geological survey seamless elevation models with shuttle radar topography mission data
D. Gesch, J. Williams, W. Miller
2001, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
Elevation models produced from Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data will be the most comprehensive, consistently processed, highest resolution topographic dataset ever produced for the Earth's land surface. Many applications that currently use elevation data will benefit from the increased availability of data with higher accuracy, quality, and resolution, especially...
Potential artifacts in interpretation of differential breakthrough of colloids and dissolved tracers in the context of transport in a zero-valent iron permeable reactive barrier
P. Zhang, W.P. Johnson, M.J. Piana, C. C. Fuller, D. L. Naftz
2001, Ground Water (39) 831-840
Many published studies have used visual comparison of the timing of peak breakthrough of colloids versus conservative dissolved tracers (hereafter referred to as dissolved tracers or tracers) in subsurface media to determine whether they are advected differently, and to elucidate the mechanisms of differential advection. This purely visual approach of...
Kullback-Leibler information in resolving natural resource conflicts when definitive data exist
David R. Anderson, K.P. Burnham, Gary C. White
2001, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 1260-1270
Conflicts often arise in the management of natural resources. Often they result from differing perceptions, varying interpretations of the law, and self-interests among stakeholder groups (for example, the values and perceptions about spotted owls and forest management differ markedly among environmental groups, government regulatory agencies, and timber industries). We extend...
Design and performance of a rugged standard operative temperature thermometer for avian studies
G.S. Bakken, A.F. Boysen, C. E. Korschgen, K.P. Kenow, S.L. Lima
2001, Journal of Thermal Biology (26) 595-604
The lack of a truly satisfactory sensor which can characterize the thermal environment at the spatial scale experienced by small endotherms has hindered study of their thermoregulatory behavior. We describe a general design for a rugged, easily constructed sensor to measure standard operative temperature, Tes. We present specific designs for...
Modern sedimentation on the shoreface and inner continental shelf at Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, U.S.A
R.E. Thieler, O.H. Pilkey Jr., W.J. Cleary, W. C. Schwab
2001, Journal of Sedimentary Research (71) 958-970
The geologic framework and surficial morphology of the shoreface and inner continental shelf off the Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, barrier island were mapped using high-resolution sidescan-sonar, bathymetric, and seismic-reflection surveying techniques, a suite of over 200 diver vibracores, and extensive seafloor observations by divers. The inner shelf is a sediment-starved,...
The effects of timber harvesting on the structure and composition of adjacent old-growth coast redwood forest, California, USA
William H. Russell, C. Jones
2001, Landscape Ecology (16) 731-741
Data collected across timber harvest boundaries on nine sites within the Redwood National and State Park management area in California, USA, were used to estimate the effective size of old-growth coast redwood preserves. Fourteen variables related to stand structure and composition, wildlife habitat, and physical environment were significantly correlated to...
Interoperability and information discovery
E. Christian
2001, New Review of Information Networking (7) 5-26
In the context of information systems, there is interoperability when the distinctions between separate information systems are not a barrier to accomplishing a task that spans those systems. Interoperability so defined implies that there are commonalities among the systems involved and that one can exploit such commonalities to achieve interoperability....
Effects of urbanization on streamflow in the Atlanta area (Georgia, USA): A comparative hydrological approach
S. Rose, N.E. Peters
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1441-1457
For the period from 1958 to 1996, streamflow characteristics of a highly urbanized watershed were compared with less-urbanized and non-urbanized watersheds within a 20 000 km2 region in the vicinity of Atlanta, Georgia: In the Piedmont and Blue Ridge physiographic provinces of the southeastern USA. Water levels in several wells...
Interactive visualization of vegetation dynamics
B. C. Reed, D. Swets, L. Bard, J. Brown, James Rowland
2001, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
Satellite imagery provides a mechanism for observing seasonal dynamics of the landscape that have implications for near real-time monitoring of agriculture, forest, and range resources. This study illustrates a technique for visualizing timely information on key events during the growing season (e.g., onset, peak, duration, and end of growing season),...
Thermal maturity patterns in New York State using CAI and %Ro
D. J. Weary, R. T. Ryder, R.E. Nyahay
2001, Northeastern Geology and Environmental Sciences (23) 356-376
New conodont alteration index (CAI) and vitrinite reflectance (%Ro) data collected from drill holes in the Appalachian basin of New York State allow refinement of thermal maturity maps for Ordovician and Devonian rocks. CAI isotherms on the new maps show a pattern that approximates that published by Harris et al....